Respiration, or breathing. It can also happen through the pores, I believe, not just the mouth and nose or other bodily orifice.
We call this a type of respiration. Animals take up oxygen (made by plants) from the air and produce carbon dioxide (used by plants).
cellular respiration
the cells
respiration
lungs
respiratory
RespiratoryOrgans of the respiratory system: nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, alveoli
Stomata is a tiny opening or pore, found mostly on the under-surface of a plant leaf. It is responsible for gaseous exchange between the leaves of plants and the environment.
No. The exchange of gases between the blood and tissue cells is called internal respiration. External respiration refers to the exchange of gases between the blood and the air inside of the alveoli of the lungs.
cycle
Partial pressures drive the movement of gases across membranes by determining the concentration gradient. Higher partial pressures of a gas will drive it to diffuse from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration, allowing for gas exchange to occur efficiently. This is the basis for gas exchange in processes like respiration in the lungs and tissues.
This body system that is responsible for the exchange of gases between the blood and the external environment.
respiratory
The primary function of the respiratory system is to provide for the exchange of respiratory gases(O2, CO2) between the organism and the environment.
The three phases of transferring gases between the environment and the cells: Breathing, the transport of gases and the exchange of gases. (Came straight from my biology textbook)
RespiratoryOrgans of the respiratory system: nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, alveoli
no
stomata
Stomata
Indirect respiration refers to a process where oxygen is transported from the respiratory surface to cells through a circulatory system, such as in insects. In this process, gases are exchanged between the respiratory surface and the circulatory system through diffusion, allowing oxygen to be delivered to cells and carbon dioxide to be removed.
External respiration is the exchange of gases between each lung and blood. It involves inhaling gases from the organisms external environment, and then exhaling the gases back out.
They are the place where the capillaries are closest to the environment in order to exchange gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide.